Noriko Nakagawa

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Aki Maeda as Noriko Nakagawa in the film Battle Royale
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Aki Maeda as Noriko Nakagawa in the film Battle Royale

Noriko Nakagawa (中川典子 Nakagawa Noriko?), also known as "Girl #15", is a main female character in the novel, manga and film Battle Royale. In the English-language manga she is nicknamed Nori.

Noriko is played by Aki Maeda in the film version and its sequel Battle Royale II: Requiem. Ai Iwamura "stands-in" for Maeda as Noriko in in one of the scenes in Battle Royale [1].

Noriko has a blood type of A.

Contents

[edit] Pre-Program

Three girls (Mayumi Tendo, Yoshimi Yahagi and Fumiyo Fujiyoshi) lock up Noriko in a toilet stall during a flashback scene. The kanji that make up Noriko's name is written in the stall. The writings read: "Nakagawa Noriko, chibi, mushi, busu, shine!", which can be translated to "Die, Noriko Nakagawa! You ugly shrimpy nit!"
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Three girls (Mayumi Tendo, Yoshimi Yahagi and Fumiyo Fujiyoshi) lock up Noriko in a toilet stall during a flashback scene. The kanji that make up Noriko's name is written in the stall. The writings read: "Nakagawa Noriko, chibi, mushi, busu, shine!", which can be translated to "Die, Noriko Nakagawa! You ugly shrimpy nit!"

Noriko Nakagawa is one of the class of third-year students at the fictional Shiroiwa Junior High School in the fictional town of Shiroiwa (the novel and manga set the town in Kagawa Prefecture, while the film sets the town in Kanagawa Prefecture). Noriko has a younger brother. She was not a member of any clubs or groups at school, but she often hung out with Yukie Utsumi and her group. In the film, Noriko is best friends with Megumi Eto. Noriko had a crush on Shuya Nanahara, whom she admired for his music and song-writing. Literature was one of Noriko's best school subjects, and it was her ambition to become a teacher.

In the film, the audience sees Noriko arrive in class (Shiroiwa Junior High), with no one present apart the teacher (Kitano). When Kitano leaves the classroom, he is slashed by a male student with a butterfly knife in the rear of his leg. The male student, Yoshitoki Kuninobu, drops the knife and runs away, and Noriko picks it up and hides it behind her right before Kitano turns around after washing off his blood off his pants.

Later, the audience sees a small flashback scene where Noriko is locked up in a toilet stall by three other girls (left side image). Different insults, written on the wall of the stall, were definitely targeted at Noriko, as her name is written on the tombstone.

[edit] During the Program

In the novel, when the students are in the school building having the rules explained to them, Noriko is shot in the lower leg by Private Tokihiko Tahara (one of the soldiers) as she ran to help Yoshitoki Kuninobu, who, in the novel, had also been shot.

In the manga, Yonemi Kamon shoots Noriko in the leg after she rushes to help Yoshitoki after Yonemi Kamon shoots Yoshitoki.

In the film, a soldier shoots her in the upper arm after the students try to flee from the classroom after Fumiyo's death; the soldiers shoot in the air and the ground in order to scare the students in submission, and one of the soldiers accidentally shoots Noriko in the arm.

The manga version of Noriko Nakagawa
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The manga version of Noriko Nakagawa

Shuya Nanahara made a vow to protect Noriko throughout the game, because Yoshitoki, his best friend, had a crush on her (but over the story Shuya falls in love with her himself). As Noriko left the school, she met up with Shuya. Her issued weapon is discovered to be a boomerang (in the movie, she receives binoculars). Noriko witnesses Oki attack Shuya and after the two fall down the hill. She runs after them and finds Shogo Kawada has saved Shuya from Kyoichi Motobuchi after which Kawada teams up with them. Noriko's injury gives her a fever, so Shuya and Shogo take her to an infirmary on the island to rest. When Shuya is injured in his battle with Kazuo Kiriyama, and ends up in the Lighthouse, Noriko stays behind with Shogo.

At the end of the Game, when Noriko, Shuya, and Shogo are the only survivors, she helps Shuya and Shogo with the plan to escape. Noriko and Shuya manage to get back to the mainland, and as the book ends, they are wanted criminals planning on escaping to the United States.

[edit] Post-Program

In the novel Shuya and Noriko are given the address of a doctor in Kobe who will help them by Shogo Kawada. Kawada dies after he gives the address. The doctor once knew Shogo's father and he happily helps them and tells them how they can get out of Japan. Later the two are at a train station in Umeda in the city of Osaka when a policeman recognises them and chases them. Shuya and Noriko run off and the book ends.

In the manga version, Noriko and Shuuya (as his name is romanized in the English manga adaptation) are also given the name of somebody who can help them by Kawada and the two of them stay in hiding at his place for three months. Just before they leave Japan, Noriko phones her mother on a secured line and though the reader only hears what Noriko is saying to her mother, it is clear that Noriko's little brother has been taken by the police as a way of getting her family to help look for her and it is also clear that her mother rejects her. This means Noriko has nothing left in Japan. Then Shinji Mimura's aunt helps them cross over the Pacific clandestinely aboard a cargo ship and land in the United States, where they decide to live in New York City.

In the sequel Battle Royale II: Requiem, Noriko is not mentioned by the name throughout a large portion of the film. Instead, various characters refer to her as "that girl" or "this girl" until she is mentioned by her full name by Shiori Kitano. Shuya reveals that he escaped with her to a war-torn country to avoid the Japanese authorities. When Shuya decided to return to Japan and fight, Noriko stayed behind. She finally appears at the end of the film to greet Shuya on his return home. Presumably, she is living in relative peace there.

[edit] Images

[edit] See also

  • Noriko's Shrine
  • Noriko's Dream
Battle Royale (edit)
Novel & mangas Battle Royale (novel) | Battle Royale (manga) | Battle Royale II: Blitz Royale (manga)
Films Battle Royale (film)  | Battle Royale II: Requiem
Soundtracks Battle Royale Original Soundtrack | Battle Royale II: Requiem Original Soundtrack | Composer: Masamichi Amano | Orchestra: Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra
Main Characters BR: Shuya Nanahara | Noriko Nakagawa | Shogo Kawada | Sakamochi/Yonemi/Kitano (the Teacher) | Kazuo Kiriyama | Mitsuko Souma | Shinji Mimura | Hiroki Sugimura
BRII: Takuma Aoi | Shiori Kitano | Nao Asakura | Riki Takeuchi | Saki Sakurai
Secondary Characters BR: Yoshitoki Kuninobu | Takako Chigusa | Yukie Utsumi | Kazushi Niida | Yuko Sakaki | Megumi Eto | Satomi Noda | Yoshio Akamatsu | Yukiko Kitano | Keita Iijima | Kayoko Kotohiki | Hirono Shimizu | Yuichiro Takiguchi | Tatsumichi Oki | Mitsuru Numai | Yutaka Seto| Yoji Kuramoto | Toshinori Oda | Sho Tsukioka | Mai (smiling winner) | Keiko Onuki (Keiko Inoue) | Lieutenant Anjo | Soldiers (Battle Royale)
BRII: R: Mitsugu Sakai | Shugo Urabe | Maki Souda | Osamu Kasai | Soji Kazama | Kyoko Kakei | Kengo Yonai | Ryo Kurosawa | Haruya Sakurai | Haruka Kuze | Masami Shibaki | Jun Nanami | Makio Mimura (Shinji's uncle) | Prime Minister of Japan
Cast and crew Koushun Takami (novel author) | Kinji Fukasaku (director) | Kenta Fukasaku (screenwriter)
BR: Tatsuya Fujiwara | Aki Maeda | Taro Yamamoto | Masanobu Ando | Kou Shibasaki | Chiaki Kuriyama | Takeshi Kitano
BRII: R: Takeru Shibaki Shugo Oshinari | Ai Maeda | Ayana Sakai | Natsuki Kato | Riki Takeuchi | Yoko Maki
Other topics Battle Royale controversy | Battle Royale merchandise | List of Battle Royale weapons | GPS tracking | Wild Seven
Related topics Dystopia | Deathmatch gaming | Ultraviolence | Teenage rebellion | Betrayal | Authoritarianism | Terrorism
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